Hitler would be Proud: D.C. setting up neighborhood checkpoints, warrantless, door-to-door searches!
WASHINGTON - June 4,
2008 - D.C. police will seal off entire neighborhoods, set up checkpoints and
kick out strangers under a new program that D.C. officials hope will help them
rescue the city from its out-of-control violence.
Under an executive order expected to be announced today, police Chief
Cathy L. Lanier will have the authority to designate “Neighborhood Safety
Zones.” At least six officers will man cordons around those zones and demand
identification from people coming in and out of them. Anyone who doesn’t live
there, work there or have a “legitimate reason” to be there will be sent away
or face arrest, documents obtained by The Examiner show.
Lanier has been struggling to reverse D.C.’s spiraling crime rate but
has been forced by public outcry to scale back several initiatives including
her “All Hands on Deck” weekends and plans for warrantless, door-to-door
searches for drugs and guns.
Under today’s proposal, the no-go zones will last up to 10 days,
according to internal police documents. Front-line officers are already being
signed up for training on running the blue curtains.
Peter Nickles, the city’s interim attorney general, said the quarantine
would have “a narrow focus.”
“This is a very targeted program that has been used in other cities,”
Nickles told The Examiner. “I’m not worried about the constitutionality of it.”
Others are. Kristopher Baumann, chairman of the D.C. police union and a
former lawyer, called the checkpoint proposal “breathtaking.”
Shelley Broderick, president of the D.C.-area American Civil Liberties
Union and the dean of the University of the District of Columbia’s law school,
said the plan was “cockamamie.”
“I think they tried this in Russia and it failed,” she said. “It’s just
our experience in this city that we always end up targeting poor people and
people of color, and we treat the kids coming home from choir practice the same
as we treat those kids who are selling drugs.”
The proposal has the provisional support of D.C. Councilman Harry
“Tommy” Thomas, D-Ward 5, whose ward has become a war zone.
“They’re really going to crack down on what we believe to be a systemic
problem with open-air drug markets,” Thomas told The Examiner.
Thomas said, though, that he worried about D.C.
“moving towards a police state.”